| Patrice Riemens on Sat, 10 Jan 2009 21:23:32 +0100 (CET) |
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| <nettime> Harv Stanic: ASCII: Amsterdam Subversive Code for Information Interchange. |
ASCII .- ... -.-. .. ..
Amsterdam Subversive Code for Information Interchange
--- Internetworkspace --- 1998 - 2..?
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Internetworkspace - A free and open place with free internet
access, aggregating point for all people interested in hacking
together, or simply hanging around or on the net while learning
Free and OSS, creating and mixing chaos for all people interested
in free flow of information across any new or old medium.
..................................................................
The idea of ASCII was conceived in late 1998 as there was the need
for a non-profit 'internetworkspace' running on free and open
source software, and spreading the word of it's necessity to
enable, educate and prepare people for the upcoming internet age,
on-line privacy, as well as need for people to meet and exchange
ideas and information face to face.
..................................................................
click start to stop
..................................................................
Early 1999 in its first incarnation cloaked as a cafe ASCII
emerged in a squatted house with big shopping windows in a ground
floor on the Herengracht, in the historic center of Amsterdam, by
installing Linux on few older machines and opening our door to
everybody who needed free internet access, email address, general
tech help or just wanted to work together with other people,
engage in a collective, not sit alone at home, drink fair trade
coffee, cheap bio-beer and so forth.
..................................................................
goal..agenda..dogma..format C:
..............................................................
Our main goal at that time was to spread the word of the Free
Software and Open Source {(F/OSS)} movement and provide free
and open access to the internet and give our support to
EVERYBODY who walked in, covering everything from setting up
an email address to free education in Linux and F/OSS. All
that at the time when the internet was gaining momentum for
most of the common people who had interest in it, but were
unable or afraid to participate and join. Microsoft with its
Windows OS were gaining momentum too, so we tried to show that
there's more than just MS Windows. We tried to convince
people interested in free flow of information that using
software made by the biggest multi-national corporation in the
world could not be a good idea. Also Hotmail was popular and
we tried to recommend and help set up other more private and
secure mail addresses for our visitors. That was only the
beginning.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
theory.. practice - phase O.I:
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
In those days many people were still only just starting to grasp
the importance of the internet as a medium, meeting place and
information source. We didn't claim the internet was more
important than other media, or that in order to have a successful
project/campaign/activity it is necessary to rely on net
mechanisms. Radio, for instance, is unsurpassed when it comes to
spreading a message to even the remotest areas of the
planet. However, none of the "conventional" media influenced our
perception of reality like the internet did then and does even
more today. That is, the boundaries of participation and
observation/non-participation are clearly defined when it comes to
reading the paper, watching TV etc. The internet, on the other
hand, has a far-reaching interactivity. It is a soapbox, library,
publishing tool and meeting place at the same time. Where else
could one find detailed and extensive information on, for
instance, genetic modification, join a newsgroup, put a website
up, find like-minded people to organize a global campaign, spread
news about local actions within minutes of them taking place - all
of that just a click away..or a few?
We felt that the Internet should be accessible to anyone and that
censorship sucks. Infringement on free speech, surfers' privacy
and over-commercialization of the net were major problems
already. At this rate the net would soon, we were sure even then,
be one huge billboard where multinational companies provide the
world with good, clean family fun. Not if we could help it. We
also hoped the positive subversive elements of the world will
continue to infiltrate the net and create ways to keep information
free. That was our vision at the end of the 20th Century.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Consequence, agitation and involvement:
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
After one year of our engagement in Amsterdam, we felt that our
local involvement and teachings, could be spread to other
like-minded people and also spread and applied internationally, so
we organized a couple of international meetings on the subject of
'internetworkspaces' and spread the idea within one year to more
than 10 European countries and around 20 or more cities. Being
aware that the situation in Amsterdam is not the same as in other
cities, we tried to help other places that were inspired by our
idea to adapt to the specific local environment and circumstances.
We also moved our ASCII 'internetworkspace' around Amsterdam,
changing locations and adapting our space to our demands and being
a squatted place by choice, it was forced to move around
sometimes... We participated on various international events
providing our media-tech expertise and knowledge to help activist
media centers on many occasions Europe-wide. Whether it was a
big-time international hack meeting or big-scale
anti-globalisation rally or a local environmentalist
demonstration.
In the meantime we took our local activities one step further. We
conceived (amongst the other numerous supported activities like
genderchangers.org, radar.squat.net etc.) an independent
city-wide wireless network that should offer free unmonitored
connectivity without the need of commercial companies. The
resulting Amsterdam Network Collective spanned a large part of the
city and connected several independent venues and many households
in the city. Also this concept in cooperation with people from
Leiden and London wireless communities spread all over the
continent and has inspired networks like Funkfeuer in Vienna and
Freifunk in Berlin.
Then at some point in time, after almost 8 years of existence as
'internetworkspace' we decided that we actually could close down.
Internet was available all over, Linux and F/OSS were not obscure
hacker's tools anymore and we had successfully propagated our
ideas. They have since evolved and spread internationally.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
new step towards...phase II or was it phase III...?
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The conclusion was, in our case, that to do cool stuff one doesn't
really need permanent space. The result of which would be creation
of hierarchies within the collective and a danger of becoming an
institution.
So, our future had to be shaped and we put on our thinking hats to
conceive method of a new state or existence in time. So at the
moment we try to see and find out how our ideas and purpose can
exist without an actual space. We, as a collective, are spread
all over the world. We meet sometimes in person, we discuss and
create projects, but how to put it all together in theory and
practice, that is what we see as a new challenge to be further
explored. That is on our to do list right now and this process is
ongoing...and we know that answer is not '42'.
.. -. - . .-. -. . - .-- --- .-. -.- ... .--. .- -.-. .
"If you can type 'man man' into terminal, it means that you can
run Linux too.."
... an introduction into ASCII Linux lecture
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::01:04:2009::::::::::::::::::::::
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